This Alabama teacher made a remix of 'Old Town Road' to help with her students' test-taking anxiety

An Alabama teacher's classroom remix of "Old Town Road" by Lil Nas X which aims to help with student's test-taking anxiety went viral, and started a "movement" among fellow educators looking for creative ways to help students learn.

In the video that garnered over 21,000 views on Facebook, Jasmine Merlette, 23, a third grade teacher at Sun Valley Elementary School in Birmingham, leads her students in singing: "I'm gonna ace my test, I'm gonna raise my score, I'm gonna solve 'til I can't no more," to the tune of the ridiculously catchy breakout hit.

Merlette told "Good Morning America" that she came up with the remix with the help of her students, as they were preparing for an annual statewide exam "and one of my kids said she was kind of feeling anxious."

"And I said, homegirl, we have been preparing for this test all year, you have nothing to fear!" she said. "The video was kind of a motivation, a reminder, that my kids got this and they have nothing to fear."

Jasmine Merlette

Alabama elementary school teacher Jasmine Merlette created a remix of Lil Nas X's hit "Old Town Road" to help with her students' test-taking anxiety.

Merlette said what means the most to her is how fellow educators are turning the idea into "a movement."

"The thing that brings me to tears is that fellow classroom teachers have been sending me their versions of 'Old Town Road,' but they have tailored it to their classrooms," she said. "It's really a movement."

"It's really keeping learning engaging in schools," she added.

Jasmine Merlette

Alabama elementary school teacher Jasmine Merlette created a remix of Lil Nas X's hit "Old Town Road" to help with her students' test-taking anxiety.

Merlette added that she hopes the video continues to inspire other educators from across the country to be creative in how they teach.

"We don't all learn the same and that's what it's about. So it's like, hey my kids like this song, let's use it," she said. "Or we’re going over words, let’s have a rap battle, whatever it takes."

"Keep pouring into the leaders of tomorrow," Merlette added. "That's what we do it for."